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Renata Renata is offline
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Default Try, try again - floor poly questions (or, to gloss, or not to gloss)

On Tue, 14 Oct 2008 11:37:50 -0400, "PDQ" wrote:

Agreed, but it all depends upon how much obscurity was included in the matte finish in the first place.

As a rule, a whole pile of "sheen" goes on first and the final coat is "matte". If there is only 1 coat of matte, there will not be a great deal of obscuring going on. The more matte the more obscurity.

This is the exact reason my first load of "sheen" ended up in the bedrooms and my last load ended up in the kitchen and living room. I'm sure glad I started in the bedrooms rather than the other way around.

P D Q


When I used to use poly on some furniture pieces I made, a friend and
fellow ww'er told me the formula was 2 coats of gloss to give depth
followed by a coat of satin. Remember, this is furniture, which one
presumably doesn't want to look like plastic. He could do wonders
with poly, but put in a lot of effort (more than 3 coats, as well).

Now, floors, a bit different. I used satin before and it had a teeny
bit of shine to it. This stuff today is really flat. I used the
satin because it was on a refinished floor that wasn't pristine.

My kitchen floor is newly laid walnut.

But, I did have some concern whether the single satin coat would
"inhibit" the effect. I hope not, because while it's gonna get a
light sanding, my plan is to lay the gloss right on top of the satin.
Unless I hear otherwise from y'all or in my research elsewhere.

Thanx
Renata

PS I'm looking for experience based replies. I know I can google up
all kinds of stuff.
Thanx



wrote in message ...
On Tue, 14 Oct 2008 10:48:12 -0400, "PDQ" wrote:

I do not know if this still holds or not but---
10 years ago, when I did my floor, I was told that matte looked good in bedrooms and such, and Gloss looked better elsewhere.

I took the installers advice, with 1 caveat, I used 90-100 sheen as the 80-sheen, which is what they told me was gloss did not "pop" the oak. Really made a difference in my kitchen and living rooms.

There will be no problem putting the high gloss over the matte as it is the final coat (?) that gives the shine.


Except the underlying coats of semi-gloss and satin will obscure the
grain somewhat.